The Herald

One dead and 100 injured as train crashes in station

Busy New Jersey terminal scene of disaster as carriages cause roof to collapse

- DAVID PORTER IN NEW JERSEY

AT LEAST one person was killed and more than 100 injured when a crowded rush-hour commuter train crashed through a barrier at a busy station in New Jersey and lurched across the waiting area, authoritie­s said.

People pulled concrete off bleeding victims and passengers kicked out windows and crawled out amid screaming after the arriving New Jersey Transit train ran off the end of its track at Hoboken station.

It apparently knocked out pillars as it ground to a halt in a covered waiting area, collapsing a section of the roof on to the first car.

Ross Bauer, an IT specialist who was heading to his Manhattan job from his home in Hackensack, was sitting in the third or fourth car when the train was pulling into the 109-year-old station for its final stop.

“All of a sudden, there was an abrupt stop and a big jolt that threw people out of their seats. The lights went out, and we heard a loud crashing noise – like an explosion – that turned out to be the roof of the terminal,” he said.

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie said one person was killed. Of the more than 100 others injured, 74 were taken to hospital, according to NJ Transit and area hospitals.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board (NTSB) sent investigat­ors to the scene.

They will want to know what the operator was doing before the crash and whether the person was distracted, said Bob Chipkevich, who formerly headed the NTSB train crash investigat­ions section.

William Blaine, an engineer for a company that runs freight trains, was inside the station when the train crashed, and ran over to help.

He walked over to the heavily damaged first car with a transit employee to check on the train’s engineer and said he found him slumped over the controls. The engineer’s condition was not immediatel­y clear.

The Hoboken Terminal, which handles more than 50,000 train and bus riders daily, is across the Hudson River from New York City.

It is the final stop for several train lines and a transfer point for many commuters on their way to New York City.

None of NJ Transit’s trains are fully equipped with positive train control (PTC), a safety system designed to prevent accidents by automatica­lly slowing or stopping trains that are going too fast.

The industry is under government orders to install PTC, but the deadline has been repeatedly extended by regulators at the request of the railroads – it is now the end of 2018.

Jennifer Nelson, a spokeswoma­n for NJ Transit, said she did not know how fast the train was going when it crashed through the bumper. Rail service was suspended in and out of Hoboken.

Passenger Bhagyesh Shah said the train was crowded, particular­ly the first two cars, because they make for an easy exit into the station. Passengers in the second car broke the emergency windows to get out.

“I saw a woman pinned under concrete,” Mr Shah told WNBC-TV in New York. “A lot of people were bleeding; one guy was crying.”

Brian Klein, whose train arrived there after the crash, told the Wall Street Journal that transit police ushered everyone aboard his train into a waiting room, “then started yelling, ‘Just get out! We don’t know if the building is going to hold’”.

The train had left Spring Valley, New York, at 7.23am local time and crashed at 8.45am, said NJ Transit spokeswoma­n Nancy Snyder.

More than 100,000 people use NJ Transit trains to commute from New Jersey into New York City daily.

A crash at the same station on a different train line injured more than 30 people in 2011. The PATH commuter train crashed into bumpers at the end of the tracks.

The Hoboken Terminal was extensivel­y damaged during Superstorm Sandy in 2012 and underwent major repairs.

 ??  ?? SHOCKED: A train passenger is treated for her injuries. Pictures: Getty
SHOCKED: A train passenger is treated for her injuries. Pictures: Getty
 ??  ?? AFTERMATH: Workers inspect the damage after the crowded train poughed into the terminal, leaving one person dead.
AFTERMATH: Workers inspect the damage after the crowded train poughed into the terminal, leaving one person dead.
 ??  ?? ESCAPE: Passengers rush to safety after a New Jersey Transit train crashed into the platform at Hoboken Terminal.
ESCAPE: Passengers rush to safety after a New Jersey Transit train crashed into the platform at Hoboken Terminal.

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